Heather Hogan Profile picture
Sep 19, 2020 9 tweets 2 min read Read on X
Here's one of my favorite Ruth Bader Ginsburg stories: In 1960, Harvard Law Professor Albert Sachs suggested Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter take on his star student — Ginsburg — as a clerk. Frankfurter was a notorious sexist and said no because Ginsburg was a woman.
One of Frankfurter's most misogynistic rulings was from 1948, when he wrote the majority opinion in Goesaert v. Cleary, upholding a Michigan law that prohibited women from obtaining bartender licenses, unless the bars where they worked were owned by their fathers or husbands.
The plaintiff in the case, Valentine Goesaert, challenged the law on the ground that gender discrimination infringed on the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause. Frankfurter ruled against her.
In 1976, when RBG was working for the ACLU, SCOTUS was set to hear another case in which the plaintiff argued that gender discrimination was a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause. Only this time, the person being discriminated against was a man.
Craig v. Boren. The plaintiff argued that Oklahoma's law allowing women to buy beer at 18 but men to wait until 21 was unconstitutional. RBG offered to file an amicus curiae brief on behalf of a plaintiff and was present during oral arguments.
She rolled up into SCOTUS and said, "I’m delighted to see the Supreme Court is interested in beer drinkers," a clear dig at Frankfurter. She followed that up by asking over and over if SCOTUS was really going to allow a law to stand that gave women more rights than men.
Obviously they were not! The case became the first in which SCOTUS applied intermediate scrutiny to an administrative statute governed by gender. RBG had been working toward that ruling for YEARS; she knew it would take a man being discriminated against to make it happen.
Because of RBG, SCOTUS overturned Frankfurter's beloved Goesaert v. Cleary ruling, on a case that also was about beer! Once she got her bedrock ruling, she took it back to the ACLU and won a bazillion cases on behalf of women being discriminated against.
So many, in fact, that the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause — which the man who first denied RBG entry to the Supreme Court had refused to apply to women — became fondly colloquially known as Ruth Bader Ginsburg's Equal Protection Clause.

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More from @theheatherhogan

Oct 16, 2022
News out of the #LongCovid community is even more heartbreaking than usual today. I don’t peddle in toxic positivity or false promises but my experience for the last 2.5 years has shown me there are reasons to stay here and keep living. I understand. I’ve had some VERY dark days.
But 2.5 years in and I am now riding my bike multiple times a week! Yesterday I rode for an hour! My first year of #LongCovid, I couldn’t walk half a block! I couldn’t stand up long enough to chop a carrot! Somedays I literally could not lift my head off my pillow to eat a meal!
Cognitively it seems I’ve got some damage that’s not going away, but in the beginning I could hardly even read and this year I’ve read 22 books so far! I thought #LongCovid had stolen my life from me, but it didn’t!
Read 4 tweets
Jan 11, 2022
I'm seeing and hearing from so many people who are experiencing—or have friends/family experiencing—#LongCovid from recent infections. In addition to debilitating physical symptoms, there's complete and total emotional and mental devastation. For me, it was mental annihilation.
I am absolutely not here for toxic positivity, and 'it'll all work out,' and 'everything happens for a reason.' That's garbage. But I do want to offer you maybe a little hope. When my #LongCovid started after I got Covid in March 2020, it wrecked my entire life. I was hopeless.
There was one weekend where I was in bed with my wife in one ear and my sister on the phone in my other ear trying to talk me down while I just howl-sobbed. I thought my life was over, I really did. I couldn't eat, stand, sleep, work, hold my head up, or even talk sometimes.
Read 9 tweets
Aug 29, 2020
Last week was one of those weeks when everyone on the Autostraddle TV & Film Team was just out here doing what they love and doing it so brilliantly it was a joy to watch. I love these humans so much. Here's a thread of our week.
First of all, this roundtable where I made everyone confidently describe a gay TV show they've never seen—do yourself a hilarious favor and watch @PunkyStarshine mash-up Star Trek and BSG, and @natthedem mash-up Buffy and Save the Last Dance. bit.ly/31z5yZp
Sara Ramirez updated their pronouns on social media a while back, but this week they came out as non-binary on Instagram and @carmencitaloves wrote about it with such affection. bit.ly/3jqrLPz
Read 10 tweets
Jul 15, 2020
Tomorrow is three weeks since my dysautonmia diagnosis. My life has changed so dramatically in the last four months. I had a mild case of COVID and now I use a cane, a shower chair, multiple medications to manage my heart...
I can walk slowly around my house during the day, wearing compression socks and stockings, but still need to spend a significant amount of time in bed and need to avoid stairs as much as possible. I only leave my house to go to the doctor. I have to take a car, door to door.
I wish people who won’t wear masks could have seen me in early March and could see me now. I was walking three miles a day, cycling constantly, physical therapy, cooking, cleaning, all-day with friends, wedding planning. Now I have to lie down between making tea and making toast.
Read 6 tweets
Jun 24, 2020
#Covid1in20 #LongCOVID update!

Week 16 here. Was diagnosed with post-COVID postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) today. Cardiologist said I'm the first patient she's seen with post-COVID symptoms, but wasn't surprised.
She'd been anticipating an increase in patients suffering from dysautonomia after having COVID.

My symptoms have evolved to tachycardia, orthostatic intolerance, light-headedness, brain fog, extreme fatigue, shortness of breath, chest pain and heart palpitations.
The hope is, because this is post-viral, it will phase out in time. There's also a possibility that it will be with me for the rest of my life; only time will tell. The best way I can help myself is accept this as my new normal and give my body the hydration and rest it needs.
Read 6 tweets

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